tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-735107537882408024.post7043647624597682860..comments2018-03-02T10:15:22.084-08:00Comments on brainSCANr: Paper rejected and Health2.0Bradley Voyteknoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-735107537882408024.post-86877636313260542952014-01-28T19:37:37.454-08:002014-01-28T19:37:37.454-08:00Very interesting site here and I&#39;m a big fan o...Very interesting site here and I&#39;m a big fan of visualization tools, especially those which link the public with actual science and even the scientists themselves. I love your idea and hope you continue to build on it or something similar.<br /><br />Your idea for mapping the knowledg makers is excellent - I encourage students to contact authors directly and like to do so myself. We also need search and information retrieval tools that bypass marketing materials and other sources of noise.<br /><br />The ability to &quot;skin&quot; the data and switch display types for the same information is exactly what I think we need for many types of data in general. Overlay, combine, reformat, revisualize to get completely different conclusions and to see common threads. If it is possible to embed/share your display, that too would be very cool. Linking this kind of display with an automatically updating PubMed list for the latest on each topic plus the seminal studies in every area would also be a boon to search. People (myself included) waste countless hours just trying to find the right articles on their interests - anything to help that speed along would remove the busy work and replace it with meaningful results. <br /><br />Great that you are a neuroscientist, that was my career for 10 years before switching to teaching and business. I also seek to make knowledge navigation tools for my students and am always looking for new ones to share. <br /><br />That&#39;s all for now, but I love what you are doing here!<br /><br />Paul Greenberg, PhD<br />(electrophysiology, fMRI)Paul Greenberghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09607520263416459628noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-735107537882408024.post-71715709904750243602011-09-30T03:51:35.227-07:002011-09-30T03:51:35.227-07:00Bradley,
Look forward to connecting,
cp
CorePsychBradley,<br />Look forward to connecting,<br />cp<br />CorePsychDr Charles Parkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06049818365607669400noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-735107537882408024.post-65026991098790135162011-06-14T12:38:29.894-07:002011-06-14T12:38:29.894-07:00Thanks, John.
The issue we&#39;re trying to addre...Thanks, John.<br /><br />The issue we&#39;re trying to address is how does once find a specialist practitioner? Just because someone is a psychologist/psychiatrist doesn&#39;t mean they&#39;ll know anything about autism, ADHD, bipolar, or whatever other diagnosis. It&#39;s an idea in progress, of course.<br /><br />Hopefully we&#39;ll get to work on this some more later in the summer. For now, my wife and I are taking a bit of a break on this as we work on other projects.Bradley Voytekhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15705565128439299346noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-735107537882408024.post-82494947936671910512011-06-14T08:31:13.167-07:002011-06-14T08:31:13.167-07:00I really like your site. I just found it and am s...I really like your site. I just found it and am still exploring. This map idea is interesting but the parent of a recently diagnosed child is probably not as interested in the geography of researchers as they would be in practitioners. The date filter is a great idea, the most recent studies would be most interesting. I have an ADD child and I would use this. <br />Thanks, John MekrutJohn Mekruthttp://www.thebalancedbrain.comnoreply@blogger.com